Case Law[2025] ZALAC 18South Africa
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another v SAMWU obo Gwejane and Others (JA 06/24) [2025] ZALAC 18; [2025] 6 BLLR 545 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 1325 (LAC) (20 March 2025)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
20 March 2025
Headnotes
as follows: ‘The applicants have proved beyond reasonable doubt that the respondents’ non-compliance with the order is wilful and mala fide. The second respondent as the accounting officer of the first is, in the circumstances, guilty of contempt of court. The respondents’ conduct cannot be countenanced. No municipality or municipal manager may elect not to comply with a court order. I could find no reason for refusing the mandamus compelling the second respondent to take the necessary action to ensure compliance with the order of 9 February 2021 as the purpose of this application is the enforcement of the judgment.’
Judgment
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## City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another v SAMWU obo Gwejane and Others (JA 06/24) [2025] ZALAC 18; [2025] 6 BLLR 545 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 1325 (LAC) (20 March 2025)
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another v SAMWU obo Gwejane and Others (JA 06/24) [2025] ZALAC 18; [2025] 6 BLLR 545 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 1325 (LAC) (20 March 2025)
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sino date 20 March 2025
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
No: JA06/24
In
the matter between:
CITY
OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
First Appellant
DR
IMOGEN MASHAZI
Second Appellant
and
SAMWU
obo GWEJANE & OTHERS
First Respondent
SOLIDARITY
obo MEMBERS
Second Respondent
Heard:
6 March 2025
Delivered:
20 March 2025
Coram:
Savage AJP, Sutherland,
et
Davis AJJA
JUDGMENT
DAVIS,
AJA
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against an order of the
Court
a quo
of 25 August 2023 which provides as follows:
‘
1.
The second respondent, Dr Imogen Mashazi is guilty of contempt of
court.
2.
The second respondent, Dr Imogen Mashazi is sentenced to twelve
months’ imprisonment, wholly suspended for a period of 2
years,
on condition that the respondents comply with paragraph 2 of the
order granted on 9 February 2021 under case number J646/20
within 14
days of this order.
3.
The first respondent is directed to pay the applicants’ costs
of this application on the attorney and client scale.’
Background
[2]
On 9 April 2018, an arbitration award was
issued in favour of the respondents in terms of which the first
appellant was ordered
to place the members of the first respondent
into various grades and notches on the new salary scale with effect
from 1 April 2017.
The first appellant was ordered to complete the
process by 30 June 2018. However, on 19 June 2018, the first
appellant launched
a review application against the arbitration
award. For reasons that are not strictly necessary for the
disposition of this appeal,
save for an aspect thereof canvassed
later in this judgement, the review was not prosecuted by the first
appellant.
[3]
Accordingly, on 21 August 2018, the award
was certified by the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration. The first
appellant failed to comply with this order as
a result of which the respondents launched a contempt of court
application before
the Labour Court against the first appellant in
order to enforce the award.
[4]
The
contempt of court application, which was set down on the roll for 3
May 2019, was postponed
sine
die
pending the outcome of the review application against the arbitration
award which was delivered on 19 June 2018. To the extent
that the
review application is at all relevant, it should be noted that it was
supposed to be instituted on or before 4 June 2018.
It was instituted
approximately 12 days out of time without any condonation application
for the late filing thereof. In addition,
the first appellant failed
to file the record of the arbitration proceedings. At no material
time did it request an extension or
apply to the Judge President of
the Labour Court for an extension to so file as is set out in the
Practice Manual
[1]
. Hence, at
the time of the filing of the contempt application, the first
appellant had not delivered its condonation application
for the late
filing of the review application or an application to reinstate the
now deemed withdrawn review application.
[5]
When the contempt application was
eventually heard, Mabaso AJ, although confirming the first
appellant’s review application
had lapsed and hence finding
that there was no review application properly before the Court, found
both the first and second appellants
not to be guilty of contempt of
court, notwithstanding the direction to the second respondent as the
accounting officer of the
first appellant to ensure that the
arbitration award be complied with within 15 days of the order.
[6]
Again, there was a failure by the
appellants to comply with this order of Mabaso AJ, which resulted in
the further application being
heard by the court
a
quo
which issued the order that is now
the subject of this appeal.
[7]
In her judgement, Lallie J noted:
‘
The
real dispute for determination is whether the respondents’
non-compliance with the judgment of 9 February 2021 constituted
a
contempt of court. The respondents did not file answering affidavits,
their case was argued on the applicants’ papers.
The
respondents’ defence was that their non-compliance with the
orders was
bona fide
and not wilful and
mala fide
.’
[8]
In justification of the order so granted,
Lallie J held as follows:
‘
The
applicants have proved beyond reasonable doubt that the respondents’
non-compliance with the order is wilful and
mala
fide
. The second respondent as the
accounting officer of the first is, in the circumstances, guilty of
contempt of court. The respondents’
conduct cannot be
countenanced. No municipality or municipal manager may elect not to
comply with a court order. I could find no
reason for refusing the
mandamus
compelling the second respondent to take the necessary action to
ensure compliance with the order of 9 February 2021 as the purpose
of
this application is the enforcement of the judgment.’
The appeal
[9]
When the matter was heard before this
Court, it was informed that there had been compliance with the
arbitration award and that
accordingly, paragraph 2 of the order
issued by Lallie J was effectively moot. Accordingly, the entire
appeal proceeded exclusively
against paragraph 1 of the order, namely
that the second respondent was guilty of contempt of court.
Second appellant’s
submissions
[10]
Central to the case of the second appellant
was that no personal service of the judgment of Mabaso AJ had been
served on her. Furthermore,
there had been no personal service of the
application of contempt of court upon the second appellant. Counsel
for the appellants
also submitted that the second appellant had not
even been cited in her personal capacity and no case whatsoever had
been made
in the founding affidavit that she, in her personal
capacity or official capacity, had aided and abetted the
non-compliance of
the order or Mabaso AJ.
[11]
In
this connection, counsel referred to the judgment of
Pheko
and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
[2]
(
Pheko
)at
para [39]:
‘
The
key issue is whether, in the circumstances of this case, the
Municipality has shown good cause why it should not be held in
contempt of this court’s orders. There can be no doubt that the
Municipality has not complied with this court’s directions
and
orders. However, the service of the order upon the Municipality, an
essential element to a finding of contempt, is wanting.’
[12]
Para [40] in
Pheko
needs to be read to give context to the dictum cited by counsel at
para [39]. It reads:
‘
The
Municipality submitted that it did not receive the directions and
order of this court due to its attorney's change of fax number
and
email address, and that it was an oversight not to furnish this court
with a notice of the change of address. This much was
confirmed by
the attorney, who allegedly became aware of the directions and order
only on 14 June 2014, once he was contacted by
the deputy registrar
of this court. The Municipality submitted that there was no wilful
default on its part and that the applicants
suffered no prejudice.
The registrar had transmitted the directions and order to an email
address and fax number that had been
changed during the period
preceding transmission. But the Municipality neither specified the
dates on which the addresses were
changed nor explained why it was
necessary for the attorney to change his email address and not
provide any forwarding service
addresses. The Municipality simply
said that it only became aware of the order of 12 March 2014 and the
set-down direction in
casu
on 14 June 2014.’
[13]
To this, the Court said the following at
para [43]:
‘
One
has to accept readily that the Municipality's explanation may not be
adequate. However, the undisputed evidence, confirmed under
oath by
its attorney, in particular that the order was not served and the
Municipality was not made aware of it, negates a finding
that proper
service is established. This court cannot, in the circumstances, draw
an inference of wilfulness and
mala
fides
. As a result, one cannot safely
conclude that the Municipality is in contempt of the order. It
follows that the Municipality has
shown good cause why it should not
be held in contempt.’
[14]
The
approach adopted by the Constitutional Court in
Pheko
needs, however, to be read together with the further judgment of the
Court in
Matjhabeng
Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Ltd and Others
[3]
(
Matjhabeng
).
At para [76] thereof, Nkabinde ADCJ on behalf of the Court said:
‘
In
order to give rise to contempt, an official's non-compliance with a
court order must be ‘wilful and
mala
fide
’. In general terms, this
means that the official in question, personally, must deliberately
defy the court order. Hence,
where a public official is cited for
contempt in his personal capacity, the official himself or herself,
rather than the institutional
structures for which he or she is
responsible, must have wilfully or maliciously failed to comply. As
the Supreme Court of Appeal
has held:
“
there
is no basis in our law for orders for contempt of court to be made
against officials of public bodies nominated or deployed
for that
purpose, who were not themselves personally responsible for the
wilful default in complying with a court order that lies
at the heart
of contempt proceedings.”’
[15]
In
Matjhabang
[4]
,
the
Court found that there had been various attempts made by the
municipal manager and other senior personnel of the municipality
to
settle the dispute with Eskom and accordingly, no case of wilfulness
or
mala
fides
are on the part of the municipal manager had been established.
[16]
The
dicta
of the Constitutional Court are however inapplicable to the facts of
the present case. Throughout the proceedings which dealt with
the
contempt applications in the present case, both appellants were
represented by a set of attorneys and by counsel. The second
appellant opposed the contempt of court proceedings and participated
in all the proceedings leading up to the final arguments albeit
without presenting any evidence. Her entire case is not that she had
no knowledge of the contempt proceedings but only that there
was no
personal service on her. Indeed, on 14 October 2022, the parties
agreed on the order which,
inter alia
,
provided that the second appellant shall appear in court on 17
February 2023.
[17]
Furthermore, the order of Mabaso J of 9
February 2021 provided that the second appellant, as the
Municipality’s accounting
officer, is directed to ensure that
the terms of the arbitration award are complied with within 15 days
of this order. Manifestly
on all of this evidence, it is clear that
the second appellant was aware of the arbitration award and the
non-compliance by the
first appellant of which she was the accounting
officer.
[18]
The central feature of a contempt order is
to protect the authority of the courts of this country. When a party
wilfully disobeys
an order of court and acts
mala
fide
by not taking serious steps to
comply therewith, the order holding such a party in contempt is
manifestly justified. In this case,
the accounting officer of a local
authority, knowing full well that the Municipality of which she was
the accounting officer was
required to comply with the arbitration
award. She chose to do exactly the opposite and failed to ensure that
there was compliance
therewith. Her entire defence is based on a
tenuous argument that service was not effected on her in her personal
capacity, notwithstanding
that, as the accounting officer of the
first appellant, she knew full well about the arbitration award and
the judgment of Mabaso
AJ instructing compliance therewith. In
summary, no defence was offered that gainsaid the conclusion that she
had wilfully and
in bad faith failed to comply with a court order
directing her to comply with the terms of the arbitration award.
[19]
In the circumstances, the second appellant
was correctly held to be in contempt of court and the appeal against
paragraph 1 of the
order of the court
a
quo
must be dismissed.
Costs
[20]
In the present case, costs must follow the
result with one qualification. The conduct of the second appellant,
the accounting officer
of the first appellant, was unacceptable in
her failure to ensure compliance with a court order. Consequently,
she should be ordered
to pay part of the costs of this appeal.
[21]
In the result, the following order is made:
Order
1.
The appeal against paragraph 1 of the order
of the Labour Court of 25 August 2023 is dismissed together with
costs, in which the
first appellant is ordered to pay 90% of the
costs and the second appellant 10% thereof.
DAVIS AJA
Savage AJP and Sutherland
AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
For the First and Second
Appellant:
Adv X Mofokeng
Instructed by K M Mmuoe
Attorneys
For The
Respondent:
Adv D Groenewald
Instructed by Madlela
Gwebu Mashamba Attorneys
[1]
See para 11.2.3 of the Practice Manual of the Labour Court of South
Africa, now since repealed, effective 17 July 2024.
[2]
[2015]
ZACC 10
;
2015 (5) SA 600
(CC) at para 39.
[3]
[2017]
ZACC 35
;
2018 (1) SA 1
(CC).
[4]
Ibid at para 78.
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